A Comparative Analysis of Hillary Clinton and John Mahama’s Concession Speeches in the 2016 US and Ghanaian Presidential Elections
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Date
2022-06-22
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Group (Howard Journal of Communications)
Abstract
Comparative research contributes to knowledge by providing a better understanding of how a phenomenon manifests in different
socio-cultural contexts. In this present study, we examined the concession
speeches of Hillary Clinton (United States, Democratic Party)
and John Mahama (Ghana, National Democratic Congress, NDC) in
the aftermath of their 2016 electoral defeats. Findings indicated that
three similar frames emerged between the two candidates. Hillary
Clinton’s frames included: acknowledging pain and acceptance,
democracy, values and nationalism, and gratitude. John Mahama’s
frames had: acceptance and concern, appreciation, unity, democracy,
and nationhood. Both candidates accepted the electoral outcome,
showed gratitude, and reaffirmed their belief in democracy and unity.
However, there were slight differences. Hillary Clinton’s frame on
acknowledging pain and acceptance had a more open, forthright
recognition of being hurt in a way that enabled her to process the
loss and pain. Findings from this study provide insights into recent
concession speeches across two socio-cultural and continental divides,
which builds on literature in framing and political communication.
Description
Research Article
Keywords
Concession, Framing, Ghana, Political Speeches, United States
Citation
Godwin Etse Sikanku, Nana Kwame Osei Fordjour, Eric Opoku Mensah & Kwamena Kwansah-Aidoo (2023) A Comparative Analysis of Hillary Clinton and John Mahama’s Concession Speeches in the 2016 US and Ghanaian Presidential Elections, Howard Journal of Communications, 34:1, 76-91, DOI: 10.1080/10646175.2022.2090877